3 Arrested in Connection With Racist Flyers

NBC10 Boston reporter Nia Hamm reports on three people arrested in connection with racist flyers posted around East Boston.

(Published Sunday, Feb. 17, 2019)

Three people have been arrested in connection with racist fliers posted around East Boston, police say.

It's not clear if the three men who were arrested actually posted the fliers, but they were spotted with fliers in their hands Friday night.

Matthew Wolf, 26, of Lowell, Tylar Larson, 18, of Rochester, New York, and Christopher Hood, 20, of Malden, were arrested around 9:45 p.m. Friday in the area of 1 Winthrop Street. Wolf is charged with assault and battery on a police officer. Larson and Hood are both charged with carrying a dangerous weapon.

Police were patrolling the East Boston area Friday night due to recent reports of posters that were upsetting some residents. While on patrol, officers saw a group of males wearing face masks. They approached the group to speak with them, but one of the members was extremely uncooperative. When officers reached out to obtain the man’s identification card, the man slapped the officer’s hand away. The man was subsequently arrested.

Arrests Made in Connection to Racist Flyers in East Boston

A Boston police officer spotted three men late Friday night with the flyers in question. Those three were arrested and are now facing charges in connection with what some see as hateful messages.

(Published Saturday, Feb. 16, 2019)

Police then found brass knuckles and a knife in the possession of the suspect's two friends, who were then arrested, as well.

The posters have upset some in the Boston community, while others say people have a right to free speech.

Phil Haggerty felt the posters were hate messages and took action, saying there is no place for them in his community.

“There was one after another after another and there was a whole bunch of them all up and down Meridian Street and Maverick Square," Haggerty said.

The fliers said, “Keep America American. Report any and all illegal aliens. They are not immigrants. They are criminals. Call: 1-866-DHS-2ICE”

"This is our neighborhood," Haggerty said. "A lot of our neighbors are immigrants and I just think it's important we look out for each other. We didn’t really think too hard about it. We saw the message they were spreading and we knew it just didn’t have a place here."

Clerk Pulls Out Machete on Would-Be Robber

A would-be robber armed with a knife had a surprise in store when an Alabama store clerk pulled out a machete in defense. The two's brief knife fight was caught on camera before the clerk runs out to damage the robber's car.

According to police, suspect Seth Holcomb walked up to the counter to make a purchase. He leaves the store and then comes back in as if to make a second purchase. Then, he pulled out a knife at the counter. What he didn't expect was that the clerk would pull out a machete of his own.

(Published Wednesday, March 20, 2019)

The fliers came from a group called Patriot Front, a white supremacist organization. They did not respond to NBC10 Boston’s request for comment Saturday night.

Mayor Marty Walsh did comment on the group’s effort to put these signs up in a part of Boston that is known for its diversity.

"We're working really hard in Boston," Mayor Walsh said. "There's no place in Boston for that type of rhetoric, and our police department actually is working to get to the bottom of who did this so it doesn't happen to our city again."

Haggerty says he’s heard the argument that free speech goes both ways in response to him taking down the signs.

"On one hand that goes both ways and I have the right to take down the signs if I feel like they are hateful," Haggerty said.

There were about 50 signs total in East Boston but they are nowhere to be found anymore.

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Machelle Hackney of Maricopa, Arizona, is accused of forcing her adopted children to participate in her YouTube channel and abusing them if they did not recall their lines or perform as directed. Hackney's channel had accrued hundreds of millions of views since she joined in 2012.

(Published Wednesday, March 20, 2019)

Wolf, Larson, and Hood are expected to be arraigned Tuesday in East Boston District Court. It's unclear if they have attorneys.